Committee
on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women
Twenty-ninth session
30 June-18 July 2003
Draft
report
Consideration
of reports of States parties
Rapporteur:
Ms. Christine Kapalata
Brazil
Combined
initial, second, third, fourth and fifth periodic report
1.
The Committee considered the combined initial, second, third,
fourth and fifth periodic report of Brazil (CEDAW/C/BRA/1-5) at
its 610th, 611th and 616th meetings on 1 and 7 July 2003.
I. Introduction
by the State party
2. In introducing
the report, the representative of Brazil stated that it covered
17 years, giving an overview of measures adopted by the Government
since 1985, in compliance with the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination against Women. It was the result
of a collective effort by women's organizations and experts
in human rights in partnership with the Ministry of External
Relations and the Ministry of Justice, through the National
Council for Women's Rights (CNDM). The report provided an important
tool for the present Administration whose principal goals included
the reduction of poverty and the enhancement of citizenship
rights. Brazil had also ratified the Optional Protocol to the
Convention in 2002, and had recognized the jurisdiction of international
human rights courts.
3.
The representative informed the Committee of the creation of
three institutional mechanisms to fight discrimination: namely,
the Special Secretariat for Women's Policies, created on 1 January
2003, the Special Secretariat for the Promotion of Racial Equality
Policies, and the Special Human Rights Secretariat, which were
directly subordinated to the Presidency of the Republic. The
new Government was committed to strengthening public policies
for the protection and the promotion of the rights of women
and to appropriating the necessary budgetary and human resources.
4. In updating the information contained in the report of Brazil,
the representative discussed new legislative initiatives as
well as progress in the areas of women's economic autonomy,
labour, health, education and violence against women.
5. Among the legislative provisions, the representative highlighted
a law of 1996 instituting the right to family planning within
the context of the Unified Health System and the entry into
force of a new civil code in January 2003. Notwithstanding constitutional
and legislative advances, certain prejudices and sexist and
discriminatory attitudes towards women continued to exist. For
example, domestic servants were not fully covered by labour
laws, and there was no legislative acknowledgement of the rights
of persons in homosexual relationships. Reform of the Penal
Code of 1940 was urgently needed to eliminate provisions that
discriminated against women, such as severe penalties imposed
for abortion, which the current law allowed only in restricted
situations. The representative also deplored the absence of
a law to combat domestic violence and protect victims of such
volence.
6. Observing that one of the most salient features of Brazilian
society was its inequality and high social exclusion rates,
the representative discussed areas of persistent discrimination
against women. Poverty was concentrated among black or Afro-Brazilian
groups, and women in those groups were particularly disadvantaged.
The Government's Zero Hunger Programme, which was the central
policy to combat hunger and the structural causes of poverty,
included actions targeted at women.
7. While women on average had a higher level of schooling than
men, that did not translate into comparable rates of professional
achievement and remuneration for women. Black women had significantly
lower indicators of educational achievement than white women.
New initiatives aimed at increasing school attendance and funding
for education as well as at revitalizing all levels of education
to overcome structural racial discrimination.
8. While women's access to power was occurring at different
levels, including through women's entry into the labour market
and their growing level of education, their representation in
public office remained low. The representative gave an overview
of the number of women in various branches of the Government,
stating that Brazilian women made up over 51 per cent of the
electorate, but only 8.75 per cent of the elected representatives
in the National Congress. A law of 1995 requiring that political
parties present a minimum of 30 per cent and a maximum of 70
per cent of candidates of either sex had not yet shown any significant
results. Women were also largely absent from the judiciary.
9. The representative stated that the new Government, which
included five women ministers, was pursuing measures to increase
affirmative action policies beyond electoral quotas, enhance
representation of Brazilian women in public administration and
at the international level, and stimulate greater political
participation by women through media campaigns and capacity-building
measures. Programmes were also being implemented to overcome
the resistance of the judiciary to the demands of women, such
as national seminars
to sensitize members of the judiciary and law enforcement agencies
with regard to gender equality issues; awareness-raising concerning
international human rights treaties and conventions; law reform
efforts to eliminate discrimination against women; and legislation
aimed at enforcing women's rights.
10. A national comprehensive women's health programme had been
launched in 1983. However, its full implementation faced difficulties.
For example, maternal deaths remained at a very high level.
Although a tendency towards the feminization of the epidemic
was noted, the human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (HIV/AIDS) incidence rates had been declining since
1999 as a result of the internationally recognized programme
to combat AIDS of the Ministry of Health. A series of additional
actions and measures were being developed in the field of women's
health, including those aimed at reducing maternal mortality
and improving sexual and reproductive rights.
11. The representative stated that the situation of work and
employment in Brazil was quite precarious, with a high unemployment
rate. While women accounted for 40.4 per cent of the economically
active population, obstacles to overcome included women's high
unemployment rate, traditionally lower salaries and the informality
of labour relations. Women's labour situation was further aggravated
by factors of race and ethnicity as well as by regional aspects,
as poverty was more concentrated among rural women, in major
urban centres and in certain regions of the country. The new
administration was implementing a series of actions to contribute
towards the improvement of women's opportunities in the productive
sector.
12. With regard to violence against women, the representative
pointed to the creation, since 1985, of specialized police stations
for women victims of violence. A historic ruling of the Supreme
Court of 1991 rejected the "legitimate defence of honour".
Sexual exploitation and trafficking in women and girls were
increasing in the country. One of the goals of the new Administration
was the implementation of a comprehensive programme for the
prevention and combating of violence against women, including
the drafting of legislation on domestic violence, the improvement
of services for victims of violence and
the prevention of violence against women.
13. In conclusion, the representative noted important advances
in the condition of Brazilian women and the essential contributions
women's organizations, including those for women of African
descent, in the achievement of public policies in support of
the implementation of the Convention. However, social exclusion
and high poverty affected mostly women in a country with one
of the largest income distribution gaps in the world. Sociocultural
concepts, structures and processes kept women in subordinate
positions and justified their unequal access to economic, social
and political resources. The Government and the Special Secretariat
for Women's Policies, in dialogue with civil society organizations,
were determined to make every effort to achieve equality between
women and men and among women themselves, and to eliminate discrimination
against women, in particular against black and indigenous women.
II.
Concluding comments of the Committee
14.
The Committee expresses its thanks to the State party for its
combined initial, second, third, fourth and fifth periodic report,
which, although very long overdue, was frank, informative, comprehensive,
self-critical and provided information about all levels of the
Federal Republic.
15. The Committee commends the State party on its high-level delegation,
which was headed by the Special Secretary of Women's Policies,
of ministerial rank, and included the Special Secretary of Racial
Equality Promotion Policies, also of ministerial rank, representatives
of two ministries, and representatives of non-governmental organizations.
It expresses appreciation to the State party for the oral presentation,
which provided an overview of recent advances and challenges remaining
to achieving gender equality in Brazil, and for the extensive
written responses and further clarification to the questions posed
by the Committee.
16. The Committee expresses its appreciation for the withdrawal
of the reservations to article 15, paragraph 4 and to article
16, paragraphs 1 (a), (c), (g) and (h) of the Convention.
17.
The Committee commends the State party on its Federal Constitution
of 1988 that enshrines the principle that men and women have equal
rights and duties; prohibits discrimination in the labour market
by reason of sex, age, colour or marital status; protects motherhood
as a social right by ensuring maternity leave without the loss
of job and salary; and establishes the duty of the State to suppress
violence within the family.
18. The Committee commends the State party for a number of legal
reforms introduced since the ratification of the Convention in
1984, including the law on paternity suits
involving children born out of wedlock; the law on the right to
family planning; the law that criminalizes sexual harassment;
and the law that provides for restraining orders in domestic violence
cases. The Committee also welcomes the recent reform of the Civil
Code that introduces equality between spouses in gender-neutral
terms, but acknowledges that some anachronistic provisions remain.
19. The Committee welcomes the creation of the Special Secretariat
for Women's Policies, which reports directly to the President
and has advisory, coordinating and monitoring functions with respect
to women's policies. The Committee considers that the placement
of the new national machinery at the ministerial level reflects
strong political will and the Government's commitment to working
towards achieving equality between women and men in compliance
with the Convention.
20. The Committee commends the State party for launching the Zero
HungerProgramme to combat hunger and the structural causes of
poverty, which has a significant impact on the situation of women.
21. The Committee acknowledges the vibrant and catalytic role
of women's nongovernmental organizations with regard to gender
equality issues. It also acknowledges
the partnership between the Government and women's organizations
in preparing the combined initial, second, third, fourth and fifth
periodic report.
22. The Committee notes with appreciation that the State party
has ratified the Optional Protocol to the Convention and has accepted
the amendment to article 20, paragraph 1, of the Convention, relating
to the Committee's meeting time.
Principal
areas of concern and recommendations
23.
The Committee expresses concern about the existing large gap between
the constitutional guarantees of equality between women and men
and the present de facto social, economic, cultural and political
situation of women in the State party, which widens with respect
to women of African descent and indigenous women.
24. The Committee requests the State party to ensure full implementation
of the Convention and constitutional guarantees through comprehensive
legislative reform to provide for de jure equality and to establish
a monitoring mechanism to ensure that the laws are fully implemented.
It recommends that the State party ensure that all those who are
responsible for implementing such laws at all levels be made fully
aware of their content.
25. The Committee notes with concern that, while international
treaties to which Brazil is a party have become part of domestic
law, there is disagreement in the judiciary as to the legal doctrine
regarding the status of such international treaties and their
direct applicability.
26. The Committee recommends that awareness-raising and sensitization
of the judiciary and other law enforcement authorities be undertaken
to alter the predominant view of the status of international treaties
in the hierarchy of Brazilian law.
27. The Committee is concerned that sharp economic and social
regional disparities, particularly in access to education, employment
and health care, are posing difficulties in ensuring uniform implementation
of the Convention throughout the country.
28. The Committee recommends to the State party that it ensure
uniformity of results in the implementation of the Convention
in Brazil, not only at the federal level, but also at the state
and municipal levels, through effective coordination and the establishment
of a mechanism to monitor compliance with the provisions of the
Convention at all levels and in all areas.
29. The Committee is concerned that the Penal Code still contains
several provisions that discriminate against women. It is concerned
about articles 215, 216 and 219 that require the victim to be
an "honest woman" in order to prosecute the perpetrator.
It is also concerned that article 107 covering "crimes against
custom" provides for mitigation of sentence when the perpetrator
marries his victim, or when the victim marries a third party.
The Committee notes that the draft bills to amend the Penal Code
are being discussed in the National Congress.
30. The Committee calls upon the State party to give priority
to amending the discriminatory provisions of the Penal Code without
delay so as to bring the Code into line with the Convention and
the Committee's general recommendations, in particular General
Recommendation 19 on violence against women.
31.
The Committee is concerned that, despite a Federal Supreme Court
ruling in 1991, the judiciary sometimes continues to apply the
defence of self-defence of honour for men accused of assaulting
or murdering women. The Committee is concerned that such decisions
lead to serious violations of human rights and have negative consequences
for society, strengthening discriminatory attitudes towards women.
32. The Committee recommends that the State party implement training
and awareness-raising programmes to familiarize judges, prosecutors
and other members of the legal profession with the Convention
and its Optional Protocol. It also recommends that the State party
implement awareness-raising activities addressed to the general
public on the human rights of women.
33. The Committee is concerned about the glaring persistence of
stereotyped and conservative views, behaviour and images of the
role and responsibilities of women and men, which reinforce women's
inferior status in all spheres of life.
34.The Committee recommends that policies be developed and that
programmes directed at men and women be implemented to help ensure
the elimination of stereotypes associated with traditional roles
in the family and the workplace, and in society at large. It also
recommends that the media be encouraged to project a positive
image of women and of the equal status and responsibilities of
women and men both in the private and public spheres.
35. The Committee is concerned about the impact of poverty on
Brazilian women of
African descent, indigenous women, female heads of household and
other socially excluded or marginalized groups of women and about
their disadvantaged position with respect to access to education,
health, basic sanitation, employment, information and justice.
36. The Committee urges the State party to ensure that its poverty
eradication measures give priority attention to Brazilian women
of African descent, indigenous women, female heads of household
and other socially excluded or marginalized groups of women through
adequately funded programmes and policies addressing their specific
needs.
37. While acknowledging the efforts made to address violence against
women, including the early establishment of specialized police
stations (DEAMS) and shelters, the Committee is concerned about
the persistence of violence against women and girls, including
domestic violence and sexual violence, the existing lenient punishments
for offenders and the absence of a specific law on domestic violence.
The Committee is further concerned that violence against women,
including domestic violence and sexual violence, is not being
sufficiently addressed owing to the lack of information and data.
38. The Committee urges the State party to take all necessary
measures to combat violence against women in conformity with the
Committee's General Recommendation 19 to prevent violence, punish
offenders and provide services for victims. It recommends that
the State party adopt without delay legislation on domestic violence
and undertake practical measures to follow up and monitor the
application of such a law and evaluate its effectiveness. It requests
the State party
to provide comprehensive information and data on violence against
women in its next periodic report.
39. The Committee is concerned about reports that indigenous women
are being sexually abused by military units and prospectors (gold
miners) on indigenous lands. The Committee notes that the Government
is considering developing a code of conduct to regulate the presence
of the armed forces on indigenous lands.
40. The Committee calls upon the State party to take necessary
measures to raise awareness of the situation of indigenous women
and girls and ensure that sexual violence against them is prosecuted
and punished as a grave crime. It also urges the State party to
adopt preventive measures, including swift disciplinary inquiries
and human rights education programmes for the armed forces and
law enforcement personnel.
41. The Committee is concerned at the increased rate of the various
forms of sexual exploitation of and trafficking in women and girls
in Brazil, both internally and across
borders. It is particularly concerned about the participation
of police personnel and their connivance in sexual exploitation
and trafficking and about the impunity of abusers, aggressors,
exploiters and traffickers as reported by the State party. The
Committee notes a lack of sex-disaggregated data and insufficient
information on the sexual exploitation of street children and
adolescents.
42. The Committee recommends the formulation of a comprehensive
strategy to
combat trafficking in women and girls, which should include prosecution
and punishment of offenders and protection and support to victims.
It recommends the introduction of measures aimed at eliminating
women's vulnerability to traffickers, particularly young women
and girls. It recommends that the State party enact antitrafficking
legislation and make the fight against trafficking in women and
girls a high priority. The Committee requests the State party
to include comprehensive information and data in its next report
on the issue as well as on the situation of street children and
adolescents and on policies adopted to address their specific
problems.
43. While commending the recent appointment of five women ministers
and noting the significance of the legal provisions adopting quotas
for women's participation in elected bodies, the Committee remains
concerned that women are still significantly underrepresented
at all levels and instances of political decision-making. It is
further concerned that implementation of the quotas is controversial
and lacks efficacy.
44. The Committee recommends the adoption of a comprehensive strategy
to accelerate the participation of women in decision-making positions
in political life, both in appointed and elected bodies, until
a balanced representation of women and men is attained. The Committee
recommends that non-compliance with the existing provisions aiming
at a minimum and maximum percentage of each sex be duly anctioned
and that other effective means to support implementation be adopted.
45. The Committee is concerned at the underrepresentation of women
in qualified ositions in some areas of professional and public
life, such as the judiciary and external affairs, particularly
at the highest echelons. It is also concerned that women's
participation
in high-ranking positions in economic life remains much lower
than men's.
46. The Committee recommends that proactive policies for women's
increased participation at those levels be adopted and, when appropriate,
temporary special measures in accordance with article 4, paragraph
1, of the Convention be taken to ensure women's real empowerment
on equal terms with men.
47. Although women's access to education has improved, the Committee
is concerned at the high rate of illiteracy and the low percentage
of women having education beyond primary school. It is further
concerned at the persistence of gender segregation in educational
fields and its consequences for professional opportunities. The
Committee is also concerned that, even though teaching is a preponderantly
female profession, women are underrepresented in higher education.
48. The Committee recommends that proactive measures for women's
access to all levels of education and teaching be strengthened,
particularly for marginalized groups of women, and that diversification
of educational and professional choices be actively encouraged
for women and men.
49. The Committee is concerned about discrimination against women
in the labour market, where women earn significantly less than
men in all states and irrespective of their skills and education.
It is concerned that the poor conditions of employment of women,
in general, including vertical and horizontal segregation, are
compounded by race and ethnicity. The Committee is particularly
concerned about the precarious situation of domestic workers,
the vast majority of whom are denied rights that other categories
of workers enjoy, such as mandatory limitation of the workday.
50. The Committee recommends that measures be taken to guarantee
implementation of article 11 of the Convention and the application
of relevant International Labour Organization conventions, in
particular those on nondiscrimination in employment and equal
remuneration for equal work and work of equal value for women
and men. It recommends that measures be taken to eliminate occupational
segregation, in particular through education and training. The
Committee calls on the State party to bring all domestic worker
within the bounds of its labour legislation.
51. The Committee is concerned at the high maternal mortality
rate, particularly in the more remote regions where access to
health facilities is very limited. The Committee is also concerned
at the health condition of women from disadvantaged groups and
at the high rate of clandestine abortion and its causes, linked
to, among others, poverty, exclusion and a lack of access to information.
The Committee is further concerned that, notwithstanding progress
in relation to the control of HIV/AIDS, the number of infected
women, particularly young women, has increased.
52. The Committee recommends that further measures be taken to
guarantee effective access of women to health-care information
and services, particularly regarding sexual and reproductive health,
including young women, women from disadvantaged groups and rural
women. Those measures are essential to reduce maternal mortality
and to prevent recourse to abortion and protect women from its
negative health effects. It further recommends that programmes
and policies be adopted to increase the knowledge of and access
to contraceptive methods
with
the understanding that family planning is the responsibility of
both partners. The Committee also recommends that sex education
be widely promoted, particularly targeting adolescents, with special
attention to the prevention and further control of HIV/AIDS.
53. The Committee notes a lack of comprehensive data on rural
women, including on race and ethnicity, as well as insufficient
information on their overall situation.
54. The Committee recommends that the State party generate comprehensive
sexdisaggregated data, including data on race and ethnicity that
show the evolution and impact of programmes on the country's rural
women in its next periodic report.
55. The Committee is concerned at the State party's use of the
term "affirmative action" to describe some of its measures
aimed at eliminating discrimination, rather than to describe temporary
special measures aimed at accelerating equality.
56. The Committee recommends that the State party, in devising
policies for the achievement of gender equality, not only eliminate
discrimination, but in line with article 4, paragraph 1, of the
Convention adopt temporary special measures to accelerate the
process of achieving equality.
57. While appreciating the fact that the State party's views on
the concept of "equity"
take into account concrete unequal situations and lay the foundation
for temporary special measures, the Committee notes that the terms
"equality" and "equity" are used
synonymously throughout the report in describing laws, policies,
plans and strategies.
58. The Committee recommends that the terms "equity"
and "equality" not be used synonymously or interchangeably
and that a clear understanding of the term equality, both formal
and de facto, should underpin laws, policies, plans and strategies
to ensure the State party's compliance with its obligations under
the Convention.
59. The Committee requests the State party to respond in its next
periodic report, due in 2005, to the issues covered in the present
concluding comments. It also requests the State party to improve
the collection and analysis of statistical data, disaggregated
by sex, age, race and ethnicity, and to report on the results
of programmes and policies, planned and undertaken, in its next
periodic report to the Committee.
60. Taking account of the gender dimensions of declarations, programmes
and
platforms for action adopted by relevant United Nations conferences,
summits and special sessions (such as the twenty-first special
session of the General Assembly for an overall review and appraisal
of the implementation of the Programme of Action of the International
Conference on Population and Development, the twenty-seventh special
session of the General Assembly on children, the World Conference
against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related
Intolerance and the Second World Assembly on Ageing), the Committee
requests the State party to include information on the implementation
of the aspects of those documents relating to relevant articles
of the Convention in its next periodic report.
61. The Committee requests that the present concluding comments
be widely disseminated in Brazil in order to make the people of
Brazil, in particular
government
officials, judges and politicians, aware of the steps that have
been taken to ensure the de jure and de facto equality of women
and the further steps required in this regard. It also requests
the State party to continue to disseminate widely, in particular
to women's and human rights organizations, the Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women,
its Optional Protocol, the general recommendations of the Committee
on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women and the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action, as well as the outcome
of the twenty-third special session of the General Assembly,
entitled "Women 2000: gender equality, development and
peace for the twenty-first century".
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